MEMORIAL on the 50th Anniversary of the Kafr Qasem Massacre

Those Who Were Killed in the Sixth Wave

This is the testimony of Abu Walid who was shot during the sixth wave and taken for dead.
Later he was pulled by the leg onto a pile of bodies and stayed between the dead the entire
night witnessing most of the massacre. In the morning, he was found by soldiers and
taken to the hospital.

On Thursday October 7, 1999, Hakime Rabi took me to a coffee shop in the heart of Kafr
Qasem to meet a man respectfully called Abul Walid. He has been unable to have children
and the name Abu Walid (father of Walid) is given to him as a sign of respect. Later he
explained that he had suffered great shock and has no children.

Abu Walid began talking yet seemed absent, not completely aware of our presence.
I asked him if he wanted
to know anything about myself or whether he felt comfortable with me. He said he was
fine. He had the demeanor of a sweet shy child at school dealing with his teacher.
Towards the end he told me that he has not been able to work since the day of the
massacre. When he had finished relating his story he asked if he could leave.
And we said yes and as he left I noticed that he was well cared for.

Abul Walid said: “We were working in fields in Petah Tikvah. At 4 pm we left on
bicycles. When we reached the spot on the road where they were waiting for us our
number reached fifteen all together. They began to give us orders yelling confusedly
“put your bicyles there, line up here” and then finally after ten minutes the bicycles
were piled in disorder in one spot and we were lined up in another. They sprayed us
with gun fire in two rows first they shot high and then low going and returning with
their shots. Some of us fell dead right away and some ran. They made a pile of the
dead. They dragged me by the legs and placed me on the pile of dead.

When they started getting the women off the truck I began to crawl to the olive groves.
I crawled most of the time and it was dark. I stayed under an olive tree till morning.
In the morning three soldiers came and found me. I feared they would bury me alive so
I spoke up. One had a Bryn and wanted to shoot me. Then they left and I waited. I
was wounded in the arm and leg. Later Israeli soldiers came and put me in a truck where
already there were a mother and father and their daughter all wounded. (Samia, Shaker,
and Noora Isaa) I started crying and I thought that they had killed everyone in the
village. They took us to a hospital. We reached the hospital at 10:30 am on the day
after the massacre -- on the 30th of October -- that being approximately 15 ˝ hours after
we had been shot. Our wound had not been attended to for all those hours. In the
hospital on the second day large numbers of wounded Israeli soldiers began arriving
from the Sinai.

On the day after the massacre the Israelis began to put out misleading news claiming
that only three of us had died and that there was throwing of stones by us which
caused the shooting. After twelve days we left the hospital and the news men began
to pour into Kafr Qasem.

In the court room the killers were drinking and eating and feeling good and Shidmey
was given a sentence of paying one Shillen and the others received 10 and 15 year
sentences but they were let out and given their freedom in less than a year. Dihan
was put in charge of the Arab minority in Lidd and Ramleh.”

Web posting: Samia A. Halaby, October 2006.

Copyright, Samia A. Halaby, 1998, All rights reserved. To request permission to reproduce
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